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They Would Have Know By Now It Wasn't Going To Be All Over By Christmas.

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sandyRoe | 11:49 Fri 05th Dec 2014 | ChatterBank
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At this stage of the Great War 100 years ago they must have realised they were in for a long haul. It seems the technology they already had, machine guns and poison gas for example, had far outstripped tactics. Even to a layman, sending men walking into the teeth of machine gun fire looked a very poor use of resources.
Was there nobody to say we need to rethink how we're conducting this?
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Probably loads. I suspect a dearth of good ideas, and a situation where those making the decisions weren't the ones having to live (or not) with them. In a less tragic way that sounds much like today's top management. Little changes then.
11:52 Fri 05th Dec 2014
Probably loads. I suspect a dearth of good ideas, and a situation where those making the decisions weren't the ones having to live (or not) with them. In a less tragic way that sounds much like today's top management. Little changes then.
Sandy, I just found this on the BBC site: it sort of fits it with your thread. http://www.bbc.com/news/uk-england-stoke-staffordshire-30296660
Haig - not one of my favourites as I was brought up in the ear of Lions led by donkeys - maintained that the only way to Germany was over the top

and so it proved - after the disastrous last push by Germany in March 1918, following the mutinies in most armies, they went over the top to undefended trenches....
"It [the letter] was given to Staffordshire County Council by the general's family in the 1960s but was only unearthed, among hundreds of other documents, this year." I would be really immensely angered, even urinated off, if me or members of my family gave something of historical importance to such an institution and is was just shoved into a nook to be found decades later. And yet this kind of "find" seems to happen so often.
Good progz being re broadcast

1964 - the Great War
and on Al Jazeera - Arabs in the First World War
ALOT of archive film from then Trans Jordan
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Haig, being a soldier, would say that, wouldn't he?
The Gremans must have had trench warfare in the back of their minds when they came up with the concept of Blitzkrieg. I think there was an English military tactician, whose name escapes me, who became influential in the 1930s.
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I knew I'd read it somewhere, probably in "The Guns Of August" by B Tuchman, but I had to look it up. The general military strategy prepared by the Germans prior to the war was known as the Schlieffen Plan.
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Liddell-Hart, it was.
It seems there were men to say, 'We need to rethink how we're doing this'. The problem was getting somebody to listen.
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Not 'somebody' but the right people to listen.
Any other thoughts on that letter, mentioned above, and "hundreds of other documents" being "discovered" 60 plus years later...Absolutely unforgivable in my opinion.
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An archive might contain tens of thousands of documents. It would be a disgrace if it had been known about and just ignored. If it hadn't been known then to have uncover such a gem was like finding the proverbial needle in a haystack.
I would gladly volunteer, perhaps even maybe pay, to have a position in which I could go through such documents and ensure that they weren't just forgotten and ignored.
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We live in straightened times. The last thing a council could afford to do is pay researchers to sift through old collections of documents.
Maybe that particular document was found by a volunteer.

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